Puneet Varma (Editor)

M1 (Istanbul Metro)

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Daily ridership
  
400,000

System length
  
26.1 km (16.2 mi)

Locale
  
Number of vehicles
  
105

Operator(s)
  
İstanbul Ulaşım AŞ

Began operation
  
September 3, 1989

Number of stations
  
23

M1 (Istanbul Metro) Metro stanbul

Owner
  
Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality

Number of lines
  
1 (2 branch lines: M1A & M1B)

Headway
  
2.5 minutes in peak hours

Transit type
  
Medium-capacity rail transport system

M1, officially referred to as the M1 Yenikapı–Atatürk Airport/Kirazlı line, (also known as the Istanbul Light Metro (Turkish: Hafif Metro)) is a rapid transit line of the Istanbul Metro. Opened in 1989, it was the first rapid transit line in Istanbul and Turkey and its opening started the revival of mass-transit in Turkish cities. The M1 consists of two separate train services, the M1A and M1B. Both services run on the same line from Yenikapı to Otogar, where the M1B branches off to Kirazlı, while the M1A continues on the original line to Istanbul Atatürk Airport. The M1 has 23 stations in service, 11 underground and 3 elevated, and the total length of the line is 26.1 kilometers (16.2 mi) with 10.4 kilometers (6.5 mi) running underground. Even though the M1 is fully grade separated, it is considered a light metro line, due to the relatively low passenger capacity compared to other lines of the system. A total of 105 trainsets operate, carrying about 400,000 passengers daily.

Contents

M1 (Istanbul Metro) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In November 2014, the long-awaited extension from Aksaray to Yenikapı was opened. From Yenikapı connections are available to the M2 line and Marmaray commuter rail service as well as İDO seabus service. Using the M2 and Marmaray, passenger may travel north of the Golden Horn to Taksim, Mecidiyeköy, Levent and Maslak as well as across the Bosphorus to Üsküdar and Kadıköy. İDO seabuses offer service to coastal districts of Istanbul as well as other cities and towns on the Sea of Marmara.

M1 (Istanbul Metro) FileM1 Metro Istanbul M1A ampBpng Wikimedia Commons

History

M1 (Istanbul Metro) M1 stanbul Hafif

With Istanbul's population growing and the city rapidly expanding outward, the bus service available in the city became insufficient in the 1970s and 1980s. At that time, the city did not have a mass transit rail system, except for a single 0.57 km (0.35 mi) funicular line known as Tünel – the last operating original tramline was closed in 1969. Istanbul desperately needed a rapid transit rail system to help transport its large population.

The first segment of the M1 line began service on September 3, 1989, between Aksaray and Kocatepe. On December 18, 1989, the line was extended to Esenler, but at that time the Otogar (Intercity Bus Station) was omitted. The Otogar station, and the segment between Otogar and Zeytinburnu stations on the M1A branch line, was opened on January 31, 1994. Following this, the M1A segment between Zeytinburnu and Bakırköy stations was opened on July 3 of the same year. Further extensions of the M1A line, to Ataköy and then Yenibosna stations, were opened in July and August 1995, at which point the length of the line reached approximately 16 km. In 1999, a new M1A line station located between Ataköy and Bakırköy stations, the Bahçelievler station, opened. Finally, the M1A branch line was completed on December 20, 2002, when the extension to the World Trade Center and Atatürk Airport in Yeşilköy opened.

A rebuilt Esenler station opened on February 22, 2012. The extension of the M1B branch line from Esenler to Kirazlı opened on June 14, 2013.

M1 (Istanbul Metro) M1es metr Isztambul Wikiwand

The extension of the M1 line from Aksaray to Yenikapı was inaugurated on November 9, 2014, which allows connections with the Marmaray commuter rail line and the M2 line.

Operations and route

A total of 105 trainsets transport up to 400,000 passenger daily between the operation hours from 6:00 in the early morning to 0:00 in the midnight. The M1 line has a maximum headway of 3 minutes during peak hours. All stations have covered seating. A total of 52 escalators and 44 elevators make access to the stations easy for passengers.

M1A branch line

The M1A line is 20.3 kilometers (12.6 mi) long in total, and serves 18 stations. The trip between the termini stations, Yenikapı and Atatürk Airport, takes approximately 35 minutes. Daily, 170 trains run in one direction between the termini stations.

On the M1A line, seven stations are built underground, nine are ground-level stations, and three are elevated. The stations are so structured that six of them have island platforms and eleven stations have side platforms. The connection station at Otogar in Esenler has two island platforms, which enable traffic on three tracks by the two different M1 branch lines.

M1B branch line

The M1B line is 14.0 kilometers (8.7 mi) long in total, and serves 13 stations. The trip between the termini stations, Yenikapı and Kirazlı, takes approximately 25 minutes. Daily, 170 trains run in one direction between the termini stations.

M1 line

The following stations are served by both the M1A and M1B branch lines:

  • Yenikapı (transfer to: M2, Marmaray, İDO)
  • Aksaray (transfer to: T1)
  • Emniyet-Fatih
  • Topkapı-Ulubatlı (transfer to: T4)
  • Bayrampaşa-Maltepe
  • Sağmalcılar
  • Kocatepe
  • Otogar (Coach Station)
  • M1A branch line

  • Terazidere
  • Davutpaşa-YTÜ
  • Merter (transfer to: Metrobüs)
  • Zeytinburnu (transfer to: T1, Metrobüs)
  • Bakırköy-İncirli (transfer to: M3)
  • Bahçelievler (transfer to: Metrobüs)
  • Ataköy-Şirinevler (transfer to: Metrobüs)
  • Yenibosna (transfer to: M9)
  • DTM-İstanbul Fuar Merkezi (Expo Center)
  • Atatürk Havalimanı (Airport)
  • M1B branch line

  • Esenler
  • Menderes
  • Üçyüzlü
  • Bağcılar-Meydan (transfer to: T1)
  • Kirazlı-Bağcılar (transfer to: M3)
  • Rolling stock

    Since this line is the oldest modern rail line in İstanbul, it has relatively old vehicles, produced by ABB in 1988. The vehicles reach a maximum speed of 80 km/h with an acceleration of 0.7 m/s2.

    References

    M1 (Istanbul Metro) Wikipedia